Then last spring Auditor General Michael Ferguson called out a bunch of party conservatives who'd been low-balling the jets costs.
From Canada.com:

Last spring, Ferguson ignited a political firestorm when he reported that the top-line cost cited by the Conservatives in the 2011 election campaign – $9-billion for 65 planes, or $15-billion including maintenance and other life-cycle costs – was $10-billion below the Defence department’s internal estimate.

Even the internal figure of $25.1-billion was suspect, critics said, because it assumed a 20-year life cycle. The longevity of the Lockheed-Martin-built aircraft, according to the Pentagon, is 36 years.

KPMG’s audit, due out next week, has confirmed the contention, long made by critics such as former assistant deputy minister (materiel) Alan Williams, that the F-35 program’s real cost would be much higher than any previously stated government estimate, sources say.

2. Nice way to put it. Nt

3. This plane has two immutable problems

The first is it's designed to counter threats that don't exist and may never exist. The military did that during the Cold War, and sometimes it was good - we expected the Soviet 125mm tank round to be far more powerful than it is, so the armor on the M-1 Abrams defeats it easily. With the F-35, the threats it is made to counter may never emerge...or the ones that do could overwhelm the plane.

The other, is it's overkill for the threats we actually face: insurgents and terrorists. Every time America has been attacked since 1981, the attackers were terrorists who either rented a truck, stole one or hijacked an airplane. Or they mailed the weapon to a Democrat. You don't need a multibrazillion-dollar plane to defeat these guys.

7. Or competent ticket agents, apparently

When someone who's scared shitless tries to check in on a one-way ticket paid for in cash, and he has no luggage, you call airport security. Unless you were on duty on 9/11 and then you just let 'em on the plane.

We already had the tools to stop 9/11...if anyone would have bothered to use them.

9. whoa!

10. For those who aren't in to Canadian politics ...

... this is actually very unusual.

Our right wing government is all about "fighting terrorism", "supporting the troops" and "getting tough on crime". They've been lying to us about the cost of these jets for years, and the auditors have been beating them up over it constantly.

The fact that, after all the deceit and outright falsehoods, they're actually admitting they were wrong is quite significant. These people *never* admit that they're wrong.

12. Not necessarily rejected:

"The Conservative government says it has not made a decision on the F-35 as a replacement for Canada's CF-18 fighter jets, but it now appears to concede that alternative fighter purchase options will be considered."